English Conversation Exercise - Is Rachel Stressed? Ben Franklin Exericse

799,151 views ・ 2015-01-28

Rachel's English


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>> Here with my friend Tom, my favorite Rachel’s English teacher, besides myself.
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>> Of course. >> We’re going to have a little conversation
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and then turn it into a Ben Franklin exercise.
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>> Are you stressed about anything, Rach? Can I call you Rach?
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>> You can call me Rach. >> Um, sort, of, but in a very good way. You
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know I’m leaving for Europe. >> Yes, that’s right. How long are you going
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to be gone for? >> I’m going to be gone for five weeks.
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>> That’s a good long time. >> It’s a good long time. I’m leaving
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in 10 days. So it feels like there’s a lot to be done.
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>> Are you stressed about anything, Rach? [2x]
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Are you stressed about anything, Rach? Every word there was quite fast except for the word
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‘you’. It’s a little uncommon to stress a function word like this. Normally, I think
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I would stress the word ‘stressed’. Are you stressed about anything, Rach? But the
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reason why Tom stressed the word ‘you’ is because I had just asked him if he was
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stressed about anything. So now, he was turning the question to me, and he stressed ‘you’.
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Are you stressed about anything, Rach?
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>> Are you stressed about anything, Rach? [2x]
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A couple other things I notice about this sentence, Tom turns the T into a D, making
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it a flap. About anything, about anything. He’s doing this because it’s a T coming
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between two vowel sounds. Even though it’s two separate words, the T still comes between
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two vowel sounds, which means it’s a great opportunity to link the two words together
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with a Flap T (which sounds like the American D).
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About anything [3x]. Are you stressed about anything, Rach?
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>> Are you stressed about anything, Rach? [2x]
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Did you notice how the intonation went up at the end? About anything Rach? Rach? Rach?
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That’s because this is a yes/no question. And yes/no questions go up in pitch at the
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end.
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>> Are you stressed about anything, Rach? Can I call you Rach?
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>> You can call me Rach.
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>> Can I call you Rach? >> You can call me Rach.
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These next two sentences are great examples of reducing the word ‘can’.
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>> Can I call you Rach? >> You can call me Rach.
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The word ‘can’ is so fast there, as if it has no vowels at all. Just the K sound
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and the N sound. Kn, kn, kn. Can I call you Rach? You can call me Rach.
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>> Can I call you Rach? >> You can call me Rach. [2x]
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Notice how everything flows together. We don’t feel like we have five separate words in this
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sentence. Can I call you Rach? Can I call you Rach? It’s just like one long word.
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We do that by linking words together. When a word begins with a vowel, and the word before
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ends in a consonant, this is an easy time to link. Just like up here, when we used a
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Flap T to link. Can I. [3x] Linking an ending consonant to a beginning vowel helps smooth
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out the line. Can I. Can I call you Rach? You can call me Rach. Again, the word ‘can’
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is almost lost here. Kn, kn. You can call me Rach.
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>> Can I call you Rach? >> You can call me Rach. [2x]
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We reduce the word ‘can’ like this when it’s not the only verb in the sentence.
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In these two sentences, the main verb is ‘call’. That means the word ‘can’ is a helping
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verb. That’s a function word, it’s not as important as the main verb ‘call’.
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The word ‘can’ is usually a helping verb. When you pronounce it reduced, kn, kn, it
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will help you sound more American. Can I call you Rach? You can call me Rach. Kn, kn.
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>> Can I call you Rach? >> You can call me Rach.
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>> Um, sort of, but in a very good way.
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Did you notice? Another Flap T here, linking the word ‘sort’ and ‘of’. Sort of,
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sort of, sort of. So it sounded like an American D. I just said that when the T comes between
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two vowel sounds, it turns into a Flap T and can link words. But R is not a vowel sound.
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The rule is, if the T comes between two vowels, or after an R, before a vowel, that it becomes
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a Flap T. Sort of. [3x] If we think of this as one word, stress is on the first syllable.
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Sor-duv. And the second syllable is very fast. It has the schwa, not a full vowel. Sort of. [2x]
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>> Um, sort of, but in a very good way.
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Let’s go back for a second. I left something important out. The word ‘um’. This is
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the word we use when we’re thinking. Um or uh. These thinking sounds use the UH as
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in BUTTER vowel. Uh, uh. I call this the core sound of American English. Everything in the
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mouth, face, neck, throat is extremely relaxed. Uh, um. That allows the placement to be lower
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in the body, less in the face. Very American. Um, uh.
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>> Um, sort of, but in a very good way. [2x]
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The first syllable of the word ‘very’, ver-, and the word ‘way’, but in a very
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good way, are the most stressed. Do you hear how fast this string of function words is?
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But in a. [4x] But in a very good way. They all link together. Again, we have ending consonant
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linking into a beginning vowel, ending consonant linking into a beginning vowel. Both of these
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links help to make it sound like one word, very smooth. But in a, but in a. Again, this
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T is turning into a Flap T, or, a D sound. But in a, but in a. But in a very good way.
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>> Um, sort of, but in a very good way. You know I’m leaving for Europe.
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You know I’m leaving for Europe. What do you hear as the most stressed syllables in
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this sentence? I hear ‘know’, ‘leav-‘, ‘Eur-‘. You know I’m leaving for Europe.
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>> You know I’m leaving for Europe. [2x]
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These are all the most important parts of the sentence, the content words. Content words
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are nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs. Here we have verb, verb, and proper noun.
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You know I’m leaving for Europe. Notice that in a content word, for example, leaving,
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that only the stressed syllable is stressed. Even though this is an important word, and
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it’s a stressed word in the sentence, the unstressed syllable, the –ing ending, is
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not stressed. So, unstressed syllables, even in stressed words, are still unstressed syllables.
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>> You know I’m leaving for Europe. [2x]
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Notice I use the contraction I’m. Some of my students don’t like to use contractions
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because they don’t think they’re clear enough. They will say ‘I am’. You know
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I’m leaving for Europe. But using a contraction, like I’m, is just like up here, where we
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took these three words and linked them together and made them very fast. But in a. So, contractions
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are words we reduce and link together in writing and in speech. I’m, I’m.
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>> You know I’m leaving for Europe. [2x]
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Reducing and contracting words will help you sound very American. There’s actually one more
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example of a reduction in this sentence. It’s the word ‘for’. For Europe. For Europe.
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I reduced that vowel to the schwa. And the schwa-R together make one sound, rr. Rr, rr,
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fr, fr. For Europe, for Europe. And again, here we have an ending consonant linking into
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a beginning vowel. For Europe. [3x] So those two words glide together very easily. For
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Europe, for Europe.
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>> You know I’m leaving for Europe. >> Yes, that’s right. How long are you going
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to be gone for?
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This was all very fast. Yes, that’s right. How long are you going to be gone for? Wow.
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Tom didn’t even really finish the word ‘right’. Yes that’s right how long? He certainly
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didn’t pronounce a full T. He moved on to the next sentence before he even finished
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that word.
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>> Yes, that’s right. How long are you going to be gone for?
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So there was no real break here between sentences. You probably noticed he took ‘going to’
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and turned it into ‘gonna’. How long are you gonna? You gonna? [3x] How long are you
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gonna be gone for?
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>> Yes, that’s right. How long are you going to be gone for? [2x]
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Did you notice Tom did not reduce the word ‘for’ to the schwa. Well, I just said
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that that’s something that we want to do with this word in order to make it sound more
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American. But, I do need to add: we don’t reduce words like ‘for’ when they’re
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at the end of a sentence.
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>> Yes, that’s right. How long are you going to be gone for?
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There, they need to be fully pronounced. Even though it was still very fast, it wasn’t
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a stressed word, it did have the full vowel.
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>> Yes, that’s right. How long are you going to be gone for?
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>> I’m going to be gone for five weeks.
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I’m going to be gone for five weeks. [2x] Again, I used ‘I’m’ instead of ‘I
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am’. That helped me make it fast and less important, compared to the more important
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words in the sentence.
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>> I’m going to be gone for five weeks. [2x]
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You also may have noticed, I also took ‘going to’ and pronounced it ‘gonna’.
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I’m gonna [3x].
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>> I’m going to be gone for five weeks. [2x]
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How do you hear this word ‘for’? Listen again.
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>> I’m going to be gone for five weeks. [2x]
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You’re right, it’s reduced. For, for, for, for five, for five. For five weeks.
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>> I’m going to be gone for five weeks. [2x]
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So, the most important words there, the loudest, the clearest, are ‘gone’, ‘five’,
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and ‘weeks’. Those are the words that carry the actual meaning of the sentence.
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So, we don’t reduce these more important words. But if we say all the other words fast,
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reduce them, then it makes these more important words stand out the most. I’m going to be
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gone for five weeks.
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>> I’m going to be gone for five weeks. >> That’s a good long time.
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That’s a good long time. Tom didn’t really pronounce the TH here. He reduced the word
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‘that’s’ to just the schwa-TS sound. Utsa, utsa, utsa good long time. [2x]
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>> I’m going to be gone for five weeks. >> That’s a good long time. [2x]
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We reduce that’s, it’s, what’s, at the beginning of a sentence like this a lot. And
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look, we have an ending consonant beginning vowel to link. That’s a, [3x]
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that’s a good long time. He stressed the last three words.
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>> I’m going to be gone for five weeks. >> That’s a good long time. [2x]
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We have adjective, adjective, noun.
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The three content words are stressed, longer, clearer.
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>> I’m going to be gone for five weeks. >> That’s a good long time.
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>> It’s a good long time. I’m leaving in ten days.
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I reduced the word ‘it’s’ by dropping the vowel. Tsa, tsa, it’s a good long time.
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>> It’s a good long time. I’m leaving in ten days.
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It’s a good long time. Linking the TS cluster into the schwa. Tsa, tsa, it’s a good long
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time. It’s a good long time. Again, these three words are stressed, good long time.
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I stressed the word ‘good’ the most. It’s a good long time. It’s a good long time.
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Just like Tom did earlier, I didn’t really leave a sentence break here, did I? I went
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straight on to my next thought.
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>> It’s a good long time. I’m leaving in ten days.
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Look. Another contraction. The most important syllables in that sentence: leav-, ten, days.
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I’m leaving in ten days. [4x] Again, they’re the most important parts of the sentence for
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content. The verb leaving, and the time amount, ten days.
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>> I’m leaving in ten days, so it feels like there’s a lot to be done.
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I notice the word ‘it’ is not very clear. So it feels. [2x]
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>> I’m leaving in ten days, so it feels like there’s a lot to be done.
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So it feels like. The word ‘it’ begins with a vowel. Here, the word before ends with
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a vowel. So we can link vowel to vowel. So it. [3x] So it feels like. It’s a very smooth
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transition. And it can feel like I go through the glide consonant W. So it. [3x] That helps
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me link them together. So it feels like.
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What’s happening with the T in ‘it’? It’s a Stop T. So it, so it, so it feels.
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So it feels like. The T is not fully pronounced, tt. So it, so it. But instead, I stop the
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air. So it. In general, we pronounce T’s this way when the next sound is a consonant.
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So it feels like there’s a lot to be done. And the ending Z sound of ‘there’s’
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links right into the schwa sound uh. There’s a, there’s a, there’s a lot to be done.
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>> There’s a lot to be done. [2x]
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How are these two words pronounced? Lot to, lot to. This is clearly not an ‘oo’ vowel,
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it’s a schwa. Lot to. But what about the T’s? Lot to. I’m making the first T a
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Stop T. Lot. So I’m just stopping the air for a second—lot to, lot to—before releasing
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to make the second T. There’s a lot to be done.
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>> There’s a lot to be done. [2x]
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We use these three words together, a lot to, quite a bit. Let’s do a quick comparison
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to ‘a lot of’, which we also use together frequently. Here we have an ending T consonant
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and beginning vowel. The T comes between two vowels, so it’s a Flap T or a D sound. A
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lot of, a lot of. So the T in ‘lot’ is pronounced one way in this phrase, a lot to,
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and a different way in this phrase, a lot of. Let’s listen to the whole bit of conversation
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one more time.
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>> Are you stressed about anything, Rach? Can I call you Rach?
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>> You can call me Rach. >> Um, sort, of, but in a very good way. You
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know I’m leaving for Europe. >> Yes, that’s right. How long are you going
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to be gone for? >> I’m going to be gone for five weeks.
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>> That’s a good long time. >> It’s a good long time. I’m leaving
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in 10 days. So it feels like there’s a lot to be done.
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Even with just a little bit of speech, there’s a lot to study. Thanks for studying with me.
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That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
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